Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1948 — Page 27

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JIRDAY

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“FRIDAY, JUNE 18, 1043

GARDENING—

‘Old Country’ Sys

Works Well

By MARGUERITE GEORGE 2121 E. Garfield Dr. is 81, but he has more than 12000 square feet (two city lots) in one of the best

vegetable gardens you'd

care to see. are a beautiful

the photographer couldn't catch the biggest ones—they’'d already been eaten. - i

the old country.” So he plants his beets, carrots and turnips in beds instead of rows. “Then we get a dittle rain and I sow more seed’—in the vacant spots where mature leaves shade the young plants until they're well started. It’s a perfect system under our hot Hoogier sun. Ashes sprinkled around his potatoes and-beets “help keep bugs away.” And his simple system of black raspberry pruning (“I just cut back the new stalks that grow too long”) checks neatly with Uncle Sam's advice to cut back stocky stems but just tip the weaker growth.

» . . FOR vegetable beginners: By mid-June it's too late to plant long season crops like parsnips and salsify. And cool weather vegetables like lettuce and radishes are better delayed until later. But practically any other edibles: will give you .a good harvest is you're a clever planter. Cover fine seed like carrots with burlap until it germinates. Help young plants get started by providing some shade. Lathe racks -are handy but a board supported at either end by flower pots or tin cans will do nicely. Transplanting solution is specially helpful for hot-weather transplants, (Use the tradenamed powder or stir 4 to 6 tablespoons of chemical fertilizer into a gallon of water. Use a cupful for each transplant.)

» o . MID-SUMMER ideas: C. W. Hatton, 1646 N. Auburn St, has no trouble starting a new strawberry bed in spite of hot weather, He prepares small pots of peat moss, lets selected runners root in the pots before clipping them from the parent plant. Once well-rooted, they move easily from pot to new bed. He uses only first runners and never more than three from any one plant to get strong growth. : Mrs. Fred Crickman, 524 N.

Berwick Ave, says: delphin- »

in Hoosier

Pe. I

—-

A eT by

'OUTSIZE' CABBAGE—George

Drive, with his third biggest cabbage.

fums whose /color you specially like can be multiplied to “come true” by rooting cuttings. Other perennials she has started in the same manner are Shasta daisies, baptisia and hardy asters. SOs a. IN GARDENS around town: A silvery leaved fragrant flowering shrub, the wolf willow, grows in the yard of Mr.’ and Mrs. E. B. Louden, 802 N. Arlington Ave. Its tiny yellow but highly perfumed flowers are followed by “oliyes” in the fall. Not a true willow, it's related to that equally desirable shrub, the Russian olive. Mrs. Charles Ruhlman, 3522 t St, says her little white picket fence enclosing a front - of - the - porch planting really does keep dogs from injuring her flowers. Herbert Pasch, 760 N. Graham Ave., makes his garage a feature of his yard. A scalloped wood shelf painted green, holds three pots of geraniums under a window on the long wall. Shell pink New Dawn roses climb on green lattices at either side. A half-moon flower bed beneath frames the base of the planting with an

pal

Let's 4

Meta Given

GINGERBREAD IS tangy and just the dessert to serve after It can be varied with whipped cream topping,

a heavy meal. flavored with different spices and as a topper, too.

The lemon butter cream frosting suggested in the recipe below

is delicious, but you also can use splitting the gingerbread and putting a flavorful filling between

J » » — GINGERBREAD (For Monday dinner) 14 c¢. shortening 1 tsp. vanilla extract 1% ¢. sugar « 14 c. molasses 2 eggs, well beaten 2 c. cake flour 1 tsp. salt 3 tsp. baking powder 1; tsp. soda 2 tsps. ginger 1 tsp. cinnamon 3% c. milk Cream the shortening and vanilla. Add the sugar gradually| and cream fintil light and fluffy. | Add the molasses thoroughly. Add the eggs and beat until fluffy. Add the sifted dry ingredients alternately with the milk in sev-

eral portions. Pour into a waxed |e

paper-lined 8-inch square pan. Bake in a moderate oven (3560, degrees F.) for 35 minutes. Makes an 8-inch square cake. ‘|

Mayor Will Be Guest

* . At Circus Preview Mayor Feeney will be the honor guest tonight at a preview of the Dunn Bros. Miniature Circus in Block’s Auditorium. Tonight's preview is sponsored by the Civic Theater Affairs Committee and the remainder of the showing, tomorrow through July 3, will be sponsored by the Junior Civic Theater. Proceeds of ticket sales will ‘be used for the theater.

Mrs. Harry Karcher, preview chairman, will be assisted at the door by Mrs. B. A. Ferry. Among hostesses will be Mrs. Paul T. Rochford, retiring president, and Mrs. A. K. Scheidenhelm, new president, of the Affairs Committee. ; Other hostesses will be Mesdames L. G. Gordner, Kurt F. Pantzer, Fred Luker, Damon N. Goode, Emerson Thompson, Preston Woolf, John W. Coffey, Jack Fetters, Stanley Sheard, Lindon A. Bailey, J. James Woods and Horace O. Wright and Miss Helen Coffey,

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5148

By MRS. ANNE CABOT

Add glamour to guest towels, pillowcases or dresser scarves with these enchanting designs. Embroider the graceful swan in white satin stitch, the lilies in white buttonhole stitch witn shaded pink centers. Cool floating lilly pads are buttonholeoutlined in pale greens, filled in with running stitches. To obtain hot-iron transfers for two pillowcase and two towel designs, color ‘chart for working, stitch illustrations for Pattern 5148, use the coupon below.

ANNE CABOT The Indianapolis Times 530 S. Wells 8t., Chicago 7, IIL No. 5148 Price 18¢

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. Street A Uesieatininsresonnes CIty sivevrasnees State cues Mothers Share Food . BOLTON, England—Thirty-two

mothers here lived on the equivalent of German rations for one

an pi is pos : te Cath srders . urn at once for full refun ed rie from WEN NORA:

{week and sent the food and.

-M. Bloomington, Ill. CP money saved to German children. |

edge

A rose garden you'd enjoy

tem of GardeningWeather

of dwarf white alyssum.

driving by to see is the double

collection of hybrid teas at 750 N. Campbell Ave., the home of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Campbell. Such beds have the advantage

of being e¢olorful all summer

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Minton-Fettig Rite Will Be Tomorrow

8 og jess

i 58

and Miss Cleon Studebaker, New Carlisle, O. Wade E. Mumma, Bluffton, 0]

will be the best m: hers will be Keith Kinsey ane Artes

F, Hearn. There will be a reception in the home of the bride's

parents, Mr. and- Mrs. Joseph, Emerson Fetting, 5949 Central Ave. . | As the couple leaves to spend ithe summer in SHreveport, La.,| {the bride will wear a navy and rose suit with navy accessories! and an orchid. Both the bride and bridegroom are graduates of Purdue University, where she was a member of Alpha Chi Omega Sorority. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Marion Minton, Houston, Tex.

Garden Party

The Indianapolis Parliamentary Law Club will have a garden party Monday in the home of Mrs. Cecil P. Clark, Lafayette Road and 85th St. Members of the club executive board will assist.

Men and Women—

“| YOUR MANNERS—

Situation: You are invited . to a bridge party, and your bridge is very poor. Wrong Way: Accept the invitation and hope your partners will be tolerant of your

|_peor. playing.

t Explain-te-your hostess that you do not play well enough to accept party invitations. » . a Situation: You have an appointment to make application for a job. Wrong Way: Don't give it any thought beforehand. Right Way: Find out all that you can about the firm to which you are applying for a job before your interview. . . » Situation: You drop by to visit with friends and meet a stranger at their house. Wrong Way: When you leave say “Goodby” to everyone without saying anything in particular to the person you have met. Right Way: Be sure to tell the stranger you are glad to have met him when you say goodby to the group.

Wasson's Is Summer Air-Conditioned

a ann

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By ERNEST E. BLAU 0 YOU KNOW that women sometimes develop arthritis becauge of their unconscious protest against male bossiness? That's what an institute of psychoanalysis reports—which shows how deeply some women feel they're being pushed around by the men folks. , The gals have felt that way a long time, too. One hundred and fifty years ago, Mary Wollstonecraft, first big champ of women’s rights, thundered, “men have increased women's inferiority till they are almost sunk below the standard of rational creatures!” That's sure laying it on the line. » . . YET THE cause of many women's discontent, according to authorities, really isn't male cussedness—but the fact that women's lives have been displaced by conditions the machine age which back in Mary's time. en have been partly

Are Women ‘Brow-Beaten?’

job—making -

b, in which women they've been feel unimportant, to those who com-

themselves at a disad-

bed, they sometimes strike ut and land on the male

And men, just as confused, have fought back from the opening gong. Even old Hugh Walpole, one of the victims of Mary's tongue, forgot he was a gentleman and called her “a hyena in petticoats!”

Benefit Game Chairmen Announced .

Parish chairmen have been ans

the Mother Theodore Circle, Daughters of Isabella, will sponsor June 29. The game, between the Indianapolis Indians and the Kansas City Blues, will benefit the St. Elizabeth's Home. Miss Nelle Sage is general chairman for the event. Parish chairmen include Mrs. John P. Meck, Assumption; Mrs. Clay Britton, St. Ann's; Miss Mary Ann Dolan, St. Anthony's; Miss Evelyn Smith, 8t. Catherine of Sienna; Mrs. Reginald Smith, Christ the King: Miss Marie McGary, 88. Peter and Paul Cathedral, and Miss Elizabeth Marks, St. Frances de Sales.

Others assisting are Miss Frances Steidle, 8t. Joan of Arc; Mrs. Joseph Cauldwell, 8t. Philip Neri; Mrs. Clara Feldman, St. Mary's; Miss Honora McEvilly, {8t. Thomas Aquinas; Miss Cecelia {Weigant, Sacred Heart; Miss {Thelma Haugh, Little Flower; Miss Hannah Dugan, Qur Lady of Lourdes, and Mrs. Joseph Col-

“ |bert, 8t. Roch's. Also on the list of parish chair-|{ood consumed, and not to drink

men are Mrs. Margaret Murphy, St. Patrick's; Mrs. Susan Sales, Holy Angels; Mrs. Margaret Weatherhead, Holy Cross; Mrs. J. C. Farrell, Holy Trinity: Mrs, Margaret Ann Fleetwood, St. Joseph's; Miss Laura Fessenegger, Holy Name, and Mrs. Anthony Mascari, Holy Rosary.

T urkey Leads West

ANKARA Since the founding of the Turkish Republic, the country has had a larger proportion of women as members of Parliament than Great Britain or the United States.

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Necessary By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D. WHEN people grow older, they begin to fate health problems entirely different from those which they had when they were young.

With increasing’ years, the tissues in general become more dry. This p

The ability to repair injury becomes gradually lessened; wounds heal more slowly, broken bones knit with much greater difficulty. There is a slow decrease in energy. 3 The strength and endurance of . the muscles and the speed of reaction are also decreased. The special senses become impaired and the vision, hearing, and memory are never as good in old age as in youth. None of these changes, however, need cause great concern. Simple adjustment to them is all that is necessary. . - » THE digestive system cannot adjust so easily to overloading in later years as it did in youth. Consequently, the older person should be careful to eat foodsy {Which are easy to digest. It is {wise to cut down the amount of

too much water, as this places an added burden on the digestive system and the kidneys.

People do not age at exactly the same rate of speed. Ordinarily, ft is not until the forties or early fifties that any conscious adjustment to the aging process is necessary. Perhaps it would be well if people, as they reach these years, thought a little more often of the slightly decreased capacity of their functions and organs and saved them accordingly. This does not mean that all of the active joys of life have to be cut out, but merely that one Ishould be sensible about them.

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